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Student Debt Collectors: Let the Good Times Roll

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  • Student Debt Collectors: Let the Good Times Roll

    braying sheeple load up on easy credit, burying themselves in student loan debt. If only the gummit would unleash its impressive collection tools on a FIRE claw back . . . .

    By ANDREW MARTIN

    At a protest last year at New York University, students called attention to their mounting debt by wearing T-shirts with the amount they owed scribbled across the front — $90,000, $75,000, $20,000.
    On the sidelines was a business consultant for the debt collection industry with a different take.
    “I couldn’t believe the accumulated wealth they represent — for our industry,” the consultant, Jerry Ashton, wrote in a column for a trade publication, InsideARM.com. “It was lip-smacking.”
    As the number of people taking out government-backed student loans has exploded, so has the number who have fallen at least 12 months behind in making payments — about 5.9 million people nationwide, up about a third in the last five years.

    In all, nearly one in every six borrowers with a loan balance is in default. The amount of defaulted loans — $76 billion — is greater than the yearly tuition bill for all students at public two- and four-year colleges and universities, according to a survey of state education officials.

    To get the money back, the Department of Education last fiscal year paid more than $1.4 billion to collection agencies and other groups to hunt down defaulters.

    Hiding from the government is not easy.

    “I keep changing my phone number,” said Amanda Cordeiro, 29, from Clermont, Fla., who dropped out of college in 2010 and has fielded as many as seven calls a day from debt collectors trying to recover her $55,000 in overdue loans. “In a year, this is probably my fourth phone number.”

    Unlike private lenders, the federal government has extraordinary tools for collection that it has extended to the collection firms. Ms. Cordeiro has already had two tax refunds seized, and other debtors have had their paychecks or Social Security payments garnisheed. Over all, the government recoups about 80 cents for every dollar that goes into default — an astounding rate, considering most lenders are lucky to recover 20 cents on the dollar on defaulted credit cards.

    While the recovery rate is impressive, critics say it has left the government with little incentive to try to prevent defaults in the first place.

    The New Oil Well?

    Business is booming at ConServe, a debt collection agency in suburban Rochester. The company recently expanded into a neighboring building. The payroll of 420 is expected to double in three years.

    “There is great opportunity,” said Mark E. Davitt, the company’s president and founder.

    Where some debt collection firms have made their fortunes collecting on delinquent credit cards or hospital bills, ConServe is thriving because of overdue student loans, a large majority of its business.

    With an outstanding balance of more than $1 trillion, student loans have become a silver lining for the debt collection industry at a time when its once-thriving business of credit card collection has diminished and the unemployment rate has made collection a challenge. To recoup unpaid loans, the federal government, private lenders and others have turned to collection agencies like ConServe.

    Mark Russell, a mergers and acquisition specialist, writing in the same trade publication as Mr. Ashton, the consultant at the N.Y.U. protest, suggested student loans might be a “new oil well” for the accounts receivable management industry, or ARM, as the industry is known.

    “While the Department of Education debt collection contract has been one of the most highly sought-after contracts within the ARM industry for years, I believe it is now THE most sought-after contract within this industry, centered within the most sought-after market — student loans,” Mr. Russell wrote last October.

    In 2010, Congress revamped the student loan program so that federal loans were made directly by the government. Before that, most loans were made by private lenders and guaranteed by the government through so-called guarantee agencies.

    Of the $1.4 billion paid out last year by the federal government to collect on defaulted student loans, about $355 million went to 23 private debt collectors. The remaining $1.06 billion was paid to the guarantee agencies to collect on defaulted loans made under the old loan system. That job is often outsourced to private collectors as well.

    Borrowers are most often declared in default when they cannot be found. That is when the collection agencies take over. While some in the industry, like Mr. Ashton, worry about public revolt over aggressive collection tactics, there is no holding back at this point.

    At ConServe, in a room of cubicles with college pennants lining the walls, collectors comb through databases and public records hunting for contact information for borrowers. If ConServe reaches a borrower who refuses to cooperate, the company considers garnisheeing wages or withholding a government check, which requires approval from the Department of Education.

    Dwight Vigna, director of the department’s default division, said the government did not give up easily. If a vendor like ConServe has not found a borrower in six months, the department turns the case over to another collection agency.

    In fiscal 2011, the department wrote off less than 1 percent of its loan balance, for such things as death or disability of a borrower.

    “We never throw anything away,” Mr. Vigna said.

    Though there are programs in place to help struggling borrowers, the companies hired to administer federal student loans are not paid enough for lengthy conversations to walk borrowers through the payment options, critics say. One consequence is that a government program called income-based repayment has fallen short of expectations. Under the program, borrowers pay 15 percent of their discretionary income for up to 25 years, after which the rest of their loan is forgiven. But participation has lagged because borrowers are either not aware of the program or are turned off by its complexity.

    For borrowers, the decision to default can be disastrous, ruining their credit and increasing the amount they owe, with penalties up to 25 percent of the balance.

    There is no statute of limitations on collecting federally guaranteed student loans, unlike credit cards and mortgages, and Congress has made it difficult for borrowers to wipe out the debt through bankruptcy. Only a small fraction of defaulters even tries.

    “You are going to pay it, or you are going to die with it,” said John Ulzheimer, president of consumer education at SmartCredit.com, a credit monitoring service.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/09/bu...s.html?_r=1&hp

  • #2
    Re: Student Debt Collectors: Let the Good Times Roll

    Wells Fargo credit quality report from June 2012 (pdf link):

    - Over the past year, consumer credit outstanding has risen by $116 billion, with $107 billion, or 92 percent, coming from student loans.

    - According to the New York Federal Reserve, total student loan balances, which include private student loans, rose to $904 billion in the first quarter, far above the $679 billion outstanding on credit cards. What’s worse, the delinquency rate on student loans increased to 8.69 percent, compared to 6.13 percent nine years ago.

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    • #3
      Re: Student Debt Collectors: Let the Good Times Roll

      I have a friend whose brother will die with it. He is in his mid fifties, owes 150,000 and has done odd jobs for cash for the last decade.

      Huffington Post...

      Twenty-somethings owe a record amount of student loan debt and are stuck in a weak job market that does not give them a clear path toward paying that debt off.

      Total student loan debt among borrowers under age 30 has more than doubled since the beginning of 2005 to $292 billion, as of the end of March, according to data released on Tuesday by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The average student loan debt burden for borrowers under age 30, as of the end of March, has risen 56 percent since the beginning of 2005 to a record $20,835.

      The economic bust has coincided with a student loan boom. Overall student debt has skyrocketed 148 percent since the beginning of 2005 to $902 billion, as of the end of March, according to the New York Fed.

      The rise in debt is in part due to colleges slashing scholarships. Just 35 percent of families paying for college received a scholarship in 2012, down from 45 percent in 2011, according to a study released on Monday by Sallie Mae. Meanwhile, 34 percent of all families paying for college took out federal student loans this year, up from 30 percent in 2011 and 25 percent in 2009.

      Increasing debt has led to a conundrum for recent college graduates: In a dismal job market, they need their college degrees more than ever, but those college degrees still are not strong enough to compel employers to hire them. Instead, risk-averse employers have handed 58 percent of all new jobs over the past year to workers age 55 and older, according to Dean Baker, codirector of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, leaving many young people to languish without developing job skills that are critical for boosting their earnings later in life.

      The average starting salary for recent college graduates has plunged 10 percent to $27,000 per year, according to a recent Rutgers University study. It would take 11 years for a borrower with that salary and the average student loan balance of $20,835 to pay off his or her student debt, according to the FinAid loan calculator.

      Meanwhile, the unemployment rate among 20- to 24-year-olds was 13.7 percent in June, two-thirds higher than the general unemployment rate, according to the Labor Department. There were 2.1 million unemployed 20- to 24-year-olds and 2.7 million unemployed 25- to 34-year-olds in June.

      A large share of recent college graduates are underemployed, often in dead-end jobs that do not use their skills. And some 27 percent of recent college graduates with a full-time job were working in such jobs in 2009, according to Drexel University. Their pay prospects are dismal; for example, the average annual pay for food service workers was $18,130 in 2010, according to the Labor Department. With that salary, it would take 23 years to pay off the average student
      Last edited by Thailandnotes; September 09, 2012, 08:42 PM.

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      • #4
        Re: Student Debt Collectors: Let the Good Times Roll



        George is missed . . .

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        • #5
          Re: Student Debt Collectors: Let the Good Times Roll

          Collections dorks call our house and send letters too. It's almost funny, the person they're trying to collect from has not lived in the house for over 7 years (probably longer since he was in jail for the last couple of years he owned the house).

          We just shred the letters and ignore the phone calls, I have no idea where the guy is, we bought the house from someone else. They're barking up the wrong tree, but they keep at it.

          This guy may owe someone money, but they also owe it to us to do the research and find him instead of spamming his old address incessantly - and they have no excuse for calling OUR phone #. It was never associated with this guy.

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